OriginRelated to Dutch triest. Ultimately borrowed from Latin tristis; compare French triste.
Formstryst(adverbial, positive, predicative) · tryster(adverbial, comparative, predicative) · it tryst(adverbial, predicative, superlative) · it tryste(adverbial, predicative, superlative) · tryste(common-gender, indefinite, positive, singular) · trystere(common-gender, comparative, indefinite, singular) · tryste(common-gender, indefinite, singular, superlative) · tryst(indefinite, neuter, positive, singular) · tryster(comparative, indefinite, neuter, singular) · tryste(indefinite, neuter, singular, superlative) · tryste(indefinite, plural, positive) · trystere(comparative, indefinite, plural) · tryste(indefinite, plural, superlative) · tryste(definite, positive) · trystere(comparative, definite) · tryste(definite, superlative) · trysts(partitive, positive) · trysters(comparative, partitive) · -(partitive, superlative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0